The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) has issued two orders that indicate for the first time how it would implement the prohibition against "sham" transactions under the Energy Policy Act. The separate decisions involve requests by two municipalities for orders requiring utilities to wheel power.
In one order, the FERC denied a request by the City of Palm Springs, CA, for electric transmission service from Southern California Edison (SCE) under sections 211 and 212 of the Federal Power Act (FPA) (Docket No. TX96-7-000). Palm Springs had wanted to install duplicate electric meters and compete with SCE for retail electric customers inside city limits. Palm Springs had also argued that if the FERC granted its request for transmission service, it would be protected from stranded-cost recovery by SCE, and that the FERC is the proper forum for addressing that issue.
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) argued against the "municipalization-lite" scheme, calling it a sham wholesale transaction. The CPUC also argued that allowing the request would directly interfere with the state's electric restructuring plan.